Robert Gilbert Vansittart, Baron Vansittart, in full Robert Gilbert Vansittart, Baron Vansittart of Denham (born June 25, 1881, Farnham, Surrey, England—died February 14, 1957, Denham, Buckinghamshire) British diplomat, author, and extreme Germanophobe.

Robert Gilbert Vansittart, 1938.

BBC Hulton Picture Library

Vansittart was educated at Eton and then trained for diplomatic service. He was first secretary at the Paris Peace Conference (1919–20) and principal private secretary to Lord Curzon (1920–24) and to successive Prime Ministers Stanley Baldwin (1928–29) and Ramsay MacDonald (1929–30). As permanent undersecretary at the Foreign Office (1930–38), he warned the British government of the growing military power of Germany and insisted that Great Britain should rearm. Vansittart espoused a Germanophobic doctrine—which became known as Vansittartism—that held that the conduct of German war leaders from the time of the Franco-German War (1870–71) had had the wholehearted support of the German people and that Germany had to be permanently demilitarized and isolated politically to ensure against future aggression. In terms of diplomacy, his efforts at establishing a united front against Germany included the much-maligned Hoare-Laval Pact, a secret plan which sought to forge a robust alliance between Britain, France, and Italy by providing broad support for the last’s objectives in the Italo-Ethiopian War (1935–36).

The failure of that plan led to the political marginalization of Vansittart, whom Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain regarded as a hindrance to the British government’s efforts to reach a settlement with Adolf Hitler. During the Czech crisis of 1938, Vansittart was made chief diplomatic adviser to the government, a post of no importance. He retired in 1941 and was raised to the peerage (his title became extinct upon his death). After the outbreak of World War II, Vansittart made a series of radio broadcasts—later published as Black Record: Germans Past and Present (1941)—in which he continued to espouse his controversial view that Nazi aggression was the inevitable product of German history.

Vansittart wrote novels, verse, and plays, among them Les Pariahs (1902) and Dead Heat (1939). In his autobiography, The Mist Procession, published posthumously in 1958, he could recall no major issue on which his advice had been taken, and he described his life as “a story of failure.”

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